== == Antelope Bush Aromatic Aster
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose Click on the link below for more information on Lewis and Clark:
Along the way, Lewis and Clark found:
Bull snakes
California newt
Eastern spiny softshell turtle
Northwestern garter snake
Oregon spotted frog
Pacific tree frog
Plains horned toad
Plains western hognose snake
Prairie rattlesnake
Red-spotted garter snake
Water terrapin
Western rattlesnake
Western toad
On their expedition Lewis and Clark encountered many animals, among the fish that they found were: blue catfish, channel catfish, Columbia river chub, cutthroat trout, eulachon, mountain sucker, northern pikeminnow, sauger and the white sturgeon.
List of Birds Found on Lewis and Clark Expedition
Aleutian Canada goose
American goldfinch
American raven
Black-billed magpie
Bonaparte's gull
Brewer's blackbird
Broad-tailed hummingbird
Cabanis's woodpecker
Carolina parakeet
Clark's nutcracker
Columbian sharp-tailed grouse
Franklin's spruce grouse
Glaucous-winged gull
Gray jay
Greater white-fronted goose
Harris' woodpecker
Hutchins' goose
Lewis' woodpecker
Long-billed curlew
Mountain quail
Northern flicker
Northwestern crow
Oregon ruffed grouse
Pacific loon
Pacific nighthawk
Passenger pigeon
Pinyon jay
Prairie horned lark
Prairie sharp-tailed grouse
Red-necked grebe
Richardson's blue grouse
Ring-necked duck
Sage grouse
Steller's jay
Tundra swan
Western common crow
Western grebe
Western gull
Western meadowlark
Western mourning dove
Western pileated woodpecker
Western winter wren
Lewis Monkeyflower
Wild Licorice
Indian Blanket
Pink Elephants
Lewis Syringa
Common Chokecherry
Indian Basket Grass
Red False Mallow
There are much more plants they found, but right now i am in a hurry, so ya.
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose
They considered the grizzly bear to be the most "terrifying" and "exciting of all the animals they encountered. However, it wasn't the appearance of these animals that really surprised them, but the shear numbers in which they roamed.
Aleutian Canada goose
American Bison
Prairie dogs(barking dogs)
American goldfinch
American raven
Audubon's mountain sheep
Bull snakes
Black-billed magpie
Black-tailed prairie dog
Blue catfish
Bonaparte's gull
Brewer's blackbird
Broad-tailed hummingbird
Bull snake
Bushy-tailed woodrat
Cabanis's woodpecker
California newt
Carolina parakeet
Channel catfish
Clark's nutcracker
Columbia river chub
Columbian black-tailed deer
Columbian ground squirrel
Columbian sharp-tailed grouse
Coyote
Cutthroat trout
Desert cottontail
Double-crested cormorant
Douglas' squirrel
Dusky horned owl
Eastern spiny softshell turtle
Eastern woodrat
Ermine
Eulachon
Forster's tern
Franklin's spruce grouse
Glaucous-winged gull
Goldeye
Gray jay
Greater white-fronted goose
Harbor seal
Harris' woodpecker
Hutchins' goose
Least tern
Lewis' woodpecker
Loggerhead shrike
Long-billed curlew
Long-tailed weasel
McCown's longspur
Missouri beaver
Montana great horned owl
Mountain beaver
Mountain lion
Mountain quail
Mountain sucker
Mule deer
North American porcupine
Northern bobcat
Northern flicker
Northern pikeminnow
Northern plains striped skunk
Northern pocket gopher
Northern raccoon
Northern short-tailed shrew
Northwestern crow
Northwestern garter snake
Nuttall's (common) poorwill
Oregon bobcat
Oregon pronghorn
Oregon ruffed grouse
Oregon spotted frog
Pacific (northern) fulmar
Pacific loon
Pacific nighthawk
Pacific tree frog
Passenger pigeon
Pigmy horned toad
Pinyon jay
Plains gray wolf
Plains horned toad
Plains western hognose snake
Prairie horned lark
Prairie rattlesnake
Prairie sharp-tailed grouse
Pronghorn antelope
Red fox
Red-necked grebe
Red-spotted garter snake
Richardson's blue grouse
Richardson's red squirrel
Ring-necked duck
Rocky Mountain goat
Roosevelt elk
Sage grouse
Sauger
Sea otter
Shiras' moose
Starry flounder
Steelhead trout
Steller's jay
Striped skunk
Swift fox
Thirteen-lined ground squirrel
Townsend's chipmunk
Townsend's mole
Tundra swan
Water terrapin
Western badger
Western common crow
Western fence lizard
Western gray squirrel
Western grebe
Western gull
Western meadowlark
Western mourning dove
Western pileated woodpecker
Western rattlesnake
Western tanager
Western toad
Western willet
Western winter wren
White sturgeon
White-tailed deer
White-tailed jackrabbit
Yellow-bellied marmot
They Came Accross Many Types Of Flora And Fauna.
The primary objectives of the Lewis and Clark Expedition were to explore and map the newly acquired Louisiana Purchase, establish diplomatic relations with Native American tribes, find a practical route across the western half of the continent, and study the plants, animals, and geography of the region.
thomas Jefferson sent Lewis and clark on an expedition to find out what the west was really like and to find a new water route
because he wanted to find the Red River after Lewis and Clarks expedition
Below are links to two separate WikiAnwers questions, that will answer this one:Long list of plant life discoveries by the Lewis and Clark expedition: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_plant_life_did_Lewis_and_Clark_find_on_their_expeditionLong list of geographical landmark discoveries by the Lewis and Clark expedition: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_geographic_landmarks_did_Lewis_and_Clark_encounter&updated=1&waNoAnsSet=1
ballls
The reason they went on the expedition was to find the Pacific Ocean.
to find a passage west
the west side
Sacagawea was a Shoshone woman who guided the Lewis and Clark expedition
The purpose of the Lewis and Clark expedition, or Corps of Discovery , was to find a water route to the Pacific Ocean.
Sacagawea
they tried to find a passge to the pacific ocean